Compare 665 radiologists in Miami, FL. Check ratings, insurance, and availability.
665
Radiologists
100%
Accepting patients
84%
Most common: MD
Ranked by Clarity Score, based on profile detail, verification, and patient activity.
Miami runs on two parallel healthcare systems: the massive Jackson Health public network that trains the next generation of physicians, and a private market shaped by Baptist Health, Mount Sinai, and Nicklaus. The city's Latin American medical tourism pipeline means you can find subspecialists here that most cities simply don't have.
Miami has 665 radiologists. The most common credential is MD (84%). 100% are currently accepting new patients.
Healthcare clusters along three corridors: the Civic Center medical district around Jackson Memorial, the Coral Gables corridor near Baptist and UM hospitals, and the Miami Beach strip around Mount Sinai. Traffic makes distance deceptive, so most residents stick to whichever system is closest to home. Metrorail connects to the Civic Center station directly.
Providers practice throughout Miami. Brickell is a dense financial district with specialist offices and proximity to Mercy Hospital and Baptist Health. Coconut Grove is a tree-canopied neighborhood near Mercy Hospital with family practices and wellness centers. Wynwood is an arts district with new medical offices and community health centers serving a creative, diverse community. Coral Gables is baptist Hospital of Miami and University of Miami Hospital anchor care in this established community.
Nearby hospitals include Jackson Memorial Hospital, University of Miami Hospital, and Baptist Hospital of Miami. Local training programs run through University of Miami Miller School of Medicine and Florida International University Herbert Wertheim College of Medicine. Jackson Memorial Hospital is one of the largest public hospitals in the US and a Level I trauma center.
For imaging studies, you will check in at the radiology department, change into a gown if needed, and the technologist will perform the scan. The radiologist reads the images afterward and sends a report to your doctor, usually within 24 to 48 hours. For interventional procedures, you will meet the radiologist beforehand, discuss the procedure and risks, and receive sedation or local anesthesia. Afterward, you will be monitored briefly before going home.
Bring your insurance card and a photo ID to every visit. Miami providers frequently ask for both due to high insurance fraud enforcement in the area. Expect paperwork in both English and Spanish.
You typically do not schedule a visit with a radiologist directly. Your treating physician orders imaging, and a radiologist interprets it. However, you may see an interventional radiologist for image-guided biopsies, tumor ablation, angioplasty, embolization, or drain placement. For screening mammography, you interact with the breast imaging radiologist through the mammography center.
X-ray: $50-300 · CT scan: $300-3,000 · MRI: $500-3,500 · Mammogram: $0 (preventive) or $100-500
Miami, FL has 665 licensed radiologists. 100% are currently accepting new patients, so finding an available provider should be straightforward.
Yes. 100% of radiologists in Miami, FL are currently accepting new patients. You can filter your search on FindClarity to show only providers who are taking new patients.
Miami is the epicenter of Florida's ACA marketplace, with more plan options than almost any other county in the country. However, narrow networks are common, so always verify your provider is in-network before booking. Medicaid managed care runs through Sunshine Health and Molina in this region.
An X-ray costs $50 to $300. A CT scan runs $300 to $3,000. An MRI costs $500 to $3,500. A screening mammogram is $0 (preventive). Actual costs in Miami, FL depend on the provider and your insurance plan. Outpatient imaging centers often charge significantly less than hospital-based radiology for the same study. Ask your doctor if a freestanding center is an option. Verify the facility and reading radiologist are both in-network.
Miami-Dade has one of the highest provider densities in Florida, but many specialists cluster in Coral Gables and the Civic Center. If you live in Homestead or the far western suburbs, expect a 30-to-45-minute drive for specialty care.
MD stands for Doctor of Medicine and DO stands for Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine. Both are equivalent qualifications. In Miami, FL, 84% hold the MD credential and 5% hold DO. The difference is in training pathway, not quality of care.
75% of radiologists in Miami, FL accept Medicare. Medicare covers diagnostic imaging when ordered by a physician. Screening mammograms are covered annually at no cost. CT and MRI may require prior authorization. You can filter for Medicare-accepting providers on FindClarity.
Most practices in Miami-Dade County have Spanish-speaking staff. In neighborhoods like Little Havana, Hialeah, and Doral, Spanish is often the primary language of care. Creole-speaking providers are also available in areas like Little Haiti and North Miami.
Jackson Health is the public hospital system for Miami-Dade County, anchored by Jackson Memorial Hospital. It serves all patients regardless of ability to pay and includes a network of urgent care centers, primary care clinics, and specialty hospitals across the county.
Top accepted carriers in Miami, FL include medicare, unitedhealthcare, qhp-17091, molina, and cigna.
Imaging is ordered by your treating physician and covered under your medical insurance. Many studies require prior authorization, especially MRI, CT, and PET scans. The imaging facility may bill separately from the radiologist who reads the study. Verify both are in-network. Outpatient imaging centers often cost significantly less than hospital-based imaging for the same study.